zkFL: Zero-Knowledge Proof-based Gradient Aggregation for Federated Learning

October 04, 2023 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› IEEE Transactions on Big Data

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Authors Zhipeng Wang, Nanqing Dong, Jiahao Sun, William Knottenbelt, Yike Guo arXiv ID 2310.02554 Category cs.AI: Artificial Intelligence Cross-listed cs.CR, cs.LG Citations 17 Venue IEEE Transactions on Big Data Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Federated learning (FL) is a machine learning paradigm, which enables multiple and decentralized clients to collaboratively train a model under the orchestration of a central aggregator. FL can be a scalable machine learning solution in big data scenarios. Traditional FL relies on the trust assumption of the central aggregator, which forms cohorts of clients honestly. However, a malicious aggregator, in reality, could abandon and replace the client's training models, or insert fake clients, to manipulate the final training results. In this work, we introduce zkFL, which leverages zero-knowledge proofs to tackle the issue of a malicious aggregator during the training model aggregation process. To guarantee the correct aggregation results, the aggregator provides a proof per round, demonstrating to the clients that the aggregator executes the intended behavior faithfully. To further reduce the verification cost of clients, we use blockchain to handle the proof in a zero-knowledge way, where miners (i.e., the participants validating and maintaining the blockchain data) can verify the proof without knowing the clients' local and aggregated models. The theoretical analysis and empirical results show that zkFL achieves better security and privacy than traditional FL, without modifying the underlying FL network structure or heavily compromising the training speed.
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